WebP is awesome, far better compression than JPG or PNG etc. Modern browsers support it. But, we can’t use it at all until everyone uses a browser that supports it. Because there’s no way in HTML to do fallbacks for … Continue reading →

UPDATE: Read this post if you want to know why we don’t need different content. Matt explains this in comments. I recently saw this post and was happy to see what this man had done: http://css-tricks.com/lark-queries/. He changes content when viewing … Continue reading →

Hi all, I was surprised to see this method hadn’t been attempted before so I put together a demo (full explanatory post is here), here’s the tl;dr : A resolution and bandwidth responsive image system is shown. All img tags … Continue reading →

I want to keep up on the conversations in this group, but find it very difficult to remember to come back to the site and open every thread to see if there are any new comments. Am I missing some … Continue reading →

In an early post, I offered up a sample picture element implementation in JavaScript (a polyfill) that we could use to play with and plan how the element should behave when/if implemented. The script did “work” in that it used … Continue reading →

It can be frustrating seeing this Community Group go quiet, especially following a surge in traffic that very literally brought the Community Group site down. We have to understand—and I’m speaking in no small part to myself, here—that most standards … Continue reading →

Our goal is a markup-based means of delivering alternate image sources based on device capabilities, to prevent wasted bandwidth and optimize display for both screen and print. From an accessibility standpoint, it should at the very least have something equaling … Continue reading →

I’ve been working on a JS implementation of the picture tag. It is important that a JS implementation is possible – if a JS implementation isn’t possible on older/current browsers, then these older/current browsers will display the mobile sized image. … Continue reading →